The Podiyan

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Is Avatar Really King Of The Box Office?















Yes, it's got the biggest worldwide gross of all time.
But it's still no "Gone With The Wind."

James Cameron broke his own record Tuesday. With a $1.86 billion haul, "Avatar" beat "Titanic" to become the highest grossing movie of all time at the worldwide box office.

It's a remarkable achievement. But before every Hollywood studio exec decides that all future movies must be in 3-D and feature blue aliens, it's worth getting a little perspective on the film.

"Avatar" has the advantage of showing in 3-D (which usually commands an average $3 extra per ticket) and coming out at a time when even 2-D movie tickets are more expensive than ever. According to the National Association of Theater Owners, the average ticket price in 2008 was $7.18, up 56% from prices in 1997 when "Titanic" was in theaters.

A look at domestic grosses adjusted for inflation shows a more realistic view of "Avatar"'s performance.

In the U.S., "Avatar" has grossed $555 million making it the second highest grossing domestic (as opposed to worldwide) film of all time. Titanic is temporarily still in the lead here with $600.8 million.

But adjusting for ticket price for inflation, Avatar ranks as the 26th highest grossing film in the U.S., according to Box Office Mojo. Number one? "Gone With The Wind" with $1.5 billion adjusted gross in the U.S. "Star Wars" ranks second with $1.3 billion.

Cameron's "Titanic" ranks sixth (just behind "The Ten Commandments") with an adjusted $943 million take in the U.S.

Movies are released very differently today then they were in 1939 when "Gone With the Wind" premiered. The film showed originally in 156 theaters in the U.S. "Avatar" premiered on 3,452 screens. "Gone With the Wind" was re-released in 1947, 1954 and 1961. In 1967 it was shown in 70 mm. With as many as 600 films being released per year, these days few films get a second shot in theaters.

Of course movie now can sometimes double their box office with DVD and television sales. Here we're only looking at box office.

Even some modern films beat "Avatar" when looked at through a price-adjusted prism. "Forrest Gump" (1994) ranks 22nd with an adjusted $623 million box office. "Star Wars: Episode 1 -- The Phantom Menace," which was released in 1999, ranks 19th with an adjusted $623 million domestic gross.

But most of the films at the top are from at least 30 years ago. "The Sound of Music" ranks third with an adjusted $1.05 billion take. "E.T." is just behind with $1.04 billion.

With no film on the near horizon poised to challenge "Avatar"'s dominance, the film is sure to continue to mint money. But it's got a way's to go to catch up with a classic like "Gone With The Wind."

Monday, January 18, 2010

AR Rahman - Sydney (Jai Ho) Concert - Australia!!









Are Facebook Private Items Private? Not Really




One of the big security stories of last month was that Facebook changed their privacy tools to give users more control.

One of the main changes was that users could, when posting an item, use granular control over who could see it, down to the point of specifying users who can and can't. Click the nearby image for a full-size example of the Custom Privacy dialog box.

But now F-Secure shows that private items are, at least in some cases, public.

I followed their example and created an image and set custom privacy, in the settings shown above, to "Only Me". The meaning is unambiguous: Nobody should be able to see this but me.

But go back to your wall and click on the time you created the image (such as "5 minutes ago") and you see this: (pic 02)
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See the circled part? That's a publicly accessible URL through which anyone, even a non-Facebook member, can view the image. Take a look here: (pic 03)
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I tried this with videos, events and links, and it didn't do the same thing, so perhaps this is a bug only in pictures. So thanks to F-Secure and good eye guys; I don't think Facebook privacy is completely phony, but this is definitely a bug in it.

-pcmag

Apple Halts Tablet Bounty with Legal Notice


In case you missed it, Gawker-owned tech gossip site, Valleywag, earlier this week thought it would be fun to offer $100,000 to anyone who could give them access to the Apple tablet for an hour. Apple, shockingly, was less excited about the contest. The company sent a cease and desist letter to the blog by way of a team of lawyers.

The blog claims that the letter, which includes the line "Apple has maintained the types of information and things you are soliciting ... in strict confidence" serves as "the most concrete evidence (from Apple itself, no less!) yet that there may indeed be a tablet in the works."

Apparently not enough to warrant $100,000, though. The site is instead awarding a DVD of Legally Blonde 2, a $25 Zune Marketplace giftcard, and a set of steak knives.

Let's hope they actually deliver on their promises, least they receive another legal notice.

-pcmag